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Thursday, 26 September, 2002, 12:40 GMT 13:40 UK
Grim find after Ivory Coast fighting
The Ivorian army is trying to retake Bouake
The death toll in the Ivory Coast rebellion has jumped after the discovery of more than 100 bodies in the town of Bouake, seized by mutinous troops last week.
A correspondent for Reuters news agency who visited a military school in the town said: "I was able to count 112 bodies. "They were everywhere, lying in rooms and on paths. I was only able to look into a few of the rooms," he reported. As fighting continues in Bouake, Nigeria has announced that it has sent three Alpha ground attack aircraft to Ivory Coast to help "quell" the rebellion by sections of the Ivorian army, which started on 19 September.
At least 270 people were reported dead after the first few days of the mutiny.
The Nigerian combat planes and support personnel will assist the Ivorian government forces, Wing Commander Emeka Uzoameka of the Nigerian air force told Reuters on Thursday. The agency also reported that Ghana had agreed to send its own units to assist President Laurent Gbagbo. This adds to a growing number of countries which have sent forces to Ivory Coast. The French already had a garrison in Ivory Coast but reinforced it after the rebellion, with the stated aim of protecting foreign nationals. On Wednesday, French military forces rescued more than 160 children who were trapped in an international school in Bouake. The children from the United States, Canada and the Netherlands had been pinned inside the school for a nearly a week by heavy fighting between soldiers and rebels. Around 200 US troops flew into the country to try to ensure the safety of US citizens and there is also a small British military mission in Abidjan. Ecowas role Following their rescue by French troops, the children from the Bouake school were immediately driven to out of the city towards the base the French have set up at the airport in the capital city in Yamoussoukro, 100 kilometres (62 miles) away.
The Nigerian deputy foreign minister, Dubem Onyia said that his country's forces were being sent to Ivory Coast under the auspices of Ecomog, the military wing of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas). Mr Onyia said the despatch of the aircraft followed a request from the Ecowas chairman, President Wade of Senegal, to help uphold democracy in the region. But he said that Ecomog would not be sending large contingents of ground troops for the time being.
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See also:
25 Sep 02 | Africa
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25 Sep 02 | Africa
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